Story of Psychology - Morton Hunt [493]
Houghton Mifflin Company: a passage from “The Case of Mary Jane Tilden” by Carl Rogers, in Casebook of Non-Directive Counseling, 1947, William U. Snyder, ed.; and two passages from The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind, 1976, by Julian Jaynes.
Bela Julesz: random-dot stereogram from his Foundations of Cyclopean Perception, Chicago University Press, 1971 (figure 34 in the present work).
Dalia S. Kleinmuntz, trustee for the Benjamin Kleinmuntz Trust: four sample Rorschach inkblots with interpretations, from Benjamin Kleinmuntz, Essentials of Abnormal Psychology, Harper and Row, 1980 (figure 15 in the present work).
Macmillan Journals, Ltd.: diagram from “Apparent Relative Movement of ‘Unsharp’ and ‘Sharp’ Visual Patterns,” by E. J. Verheijen, reprinted by permission from Nature 29 (1963):160–161 (figure 21 in the present work).
Macmillan Publishing Company: a passage from Science and Human Behavior by B. F. Skinner, The Free Press, 1953, and figures 2-14A and 2-14B from An Introduction to Perception, 1975, by Irvin Rock (figure 13 in the present work).
Walter Mischel: three sample questions from a personality test, p. 132 of his Introduction to Personality, 2nd edition, Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1976.
The MIT Press: ray figure in D. M. MacKay, “Interactive Processes in Visual Perception,” in Sensory Communication, 1961, edited by Walter A. Rosenblith (figure 30 in the present work); figure 6-24, p. 160, in The Logic of Perception, 1983, by Irvin Rock (figure 32 in the present work); and figure 2, p. 50, from Parallel Distributed Processing, vol. 1, Foundations, by David E. Rumelhart, James L. McClelland, and the PDP Research Group, 1986 (figure 43 in the present work).
W. W. Norton & Company: from The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud, first published in English by Hogarth Press, 23 vols., 1953–1966; passages from “Jokes and Their Relation to the Unconscious,” 1905, vol. VIII; “Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis,” 1916–1917, vol. XVI; “An Autobiographical Study,” 1925, vol. XX; “Inhibitions, Symptoms, and Anxiety,” 1926, vol. XX; and “New Introductory Lectures,” 1933, vol. XXII. Also, three passages from Pioneers of Psychology, 1979, by Raymond Fancher.
W. W. Norton & Company, and Michael Gazzaniga: figure 5.20 from Cognitive Neuro-science: The Biology of the Mind, 2nd ed., by Michael S. Gazzaniga, Richard B. Ivy, and George R. Mangun, 2002 (figure 31 in the present work); and figure 11.3 from Psychological Science, 2nd ed., by Michael S. Gazzaniga and Todd Heatherton, 2006, 2003 (figure 19 in the present work).
Plenum Publishing Corp. and Peter Sifneos: a passage from Sifneos’s Short-Term Dynamic Psychotherapy, 1987.
Brent Roberts and the APA: fig. 2 from “Patterns of Mean-Level Change in Personality” by Brent Roberts, Kate Walton, and Wolfgang Viechtbauer,” Psychol. Bull. 132 (figure 18 in the present work).
Julian Rotter and Univ. of Connecticut Psychology and CLAS Academic Services Center: questions 2, 4, 11, and 25 from his monograph “Generalized Expectancies for Internal versus External Control of Reinforcement.” Psychol. Monogr. 80 (1), whole no. 609 (1966).
Routledge publications: passages from The Mentality of Apes by Wolfgang Köhler, 1948 [1917].
Sage Publications, Morton Deutsch, and Bruce M. Russett, editor, Journal of Conflict Resolution: map of the “Acme-Bolt Game,” from “Studies of Interpersonal Bargaining,” by Morton Deutsch and Robert M. Krauss, Journal of Conflict Resolution 4 (1962), copyright by Sage Publications, 1962 (figure 20 in the present work).
Roger N. Shepard: top line of figures on p. 107 of “Turning Something Over in the Mind” by Lynn A. Cooper and Roger N. Shepard, Scientific American, December 1984 (figure 37 in the present work).
Stanford University Press: a passage from Psychology by Reciprocal Inhibition by Joseph Wolpe, 1958.
Wadsworth Publishing Company: